Can't belive the controler is a Sony Tablet! lol I'd hope so at that price though. Good selection of 4k films in there too.

The Amazing Spiderman, Total Recall (2012), The Karate Kid (2010), Salt, Battle: Los Angeles, The Other Guys, Bad Teacher, That's My Boy, Taxi Driver, and The Bridge on the River Kwai. Also included will be a couple of short videos, amongst them Red Bull Media House's The Athlete Machine: Red Bull Kluge.

No off axis is ever as good as plasma and although I've always been a plasma fan, with this and Samsung's 75" 9000 series, I'm starting to see the limitations of current plasmas like depth and detail in the blacks.

2853 titles on disc... of those, 17 are LaserDisc, 1192 are Blu-Ray, 105 are in 3D & 4 are BluRay Audio. My avatar shot was taken last October with a 200.00 Nikon set on timer with a simple table lamp.

Certainly for me, pretty much no matter what it looks like, the difference over my current set is not going to be worth $25,000. It'll be a while before I even consider upgrading to that kind of set.

Give it some time. We're probably looking at a situation similar to the Sony XBR3, the first 70" LCD TV that sold for $33,000 in 2007. The 70" XBR7 followed shortly after (2009?) for around $20,000, but was taken off the market when the 70" Sharp LED backlit TV appeared in 2011 for a street price of $2,000. If the past is any indicator, the price on the 84" 4K sets and their variants is going to drop like a rock.

The first high def broadcast in the US was in November 1998 the first Blu ray came out in 2006 that's 8 years in another 8 years it will be 2020. That's if the same cycle for high def continues to 4K, yes I already know they have some 4K content.

If the Mayans are correct we will only be around for 8 more days any way so what the hell.

i might be alone on this but i think a 8k tv is just overkill. 90+ inch tv is alittle too much. I love my 55" tv.

You're definitely not alone but it's funny how perceptions change.

25" CRTs used to be considered pretty big. When CRT projection sets were humongous appliances they were generally banished to garages and basements.

Now? I think 42" is the median screen size and 50"-55" doesn't seem at all out of place or overly large in living rooms.

Does a 70"-90" screen seem like it might be a bit overwhelming for a tv?

Yeah, a little bit. But who knows how we'll feel about that in a few years.

And I have been fortunate to escape what has been called ďthat form of snobbery which can accept the Literature of Entertainment in the Past, but only the Literature of the Enlightenment in the Present.Ē - Raymond Chandler

'Course I'm respectable. I'm old. Politicians, ugly buildings, and whor*s all get respectable if they last long enough. - Noah Cross